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Fed Funds Rate sits at 4.25‑4.50% after Dec 2024 cut, the highest since the early 1980s. See how the target compares to past lows and what it means for
The Federal Open Market Committee left the federal funds rate unchanged at a target range of 4.25%‑4.50% on Dec 18 2024, marking the first cut in more than four years and signaling a shift toward supporting growth while keeping inflation in check【1】.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Current target range | 4.25%‑4.50% |
| First cut since | Dec 2020 (rate was 0%‑0.25%) |
| Historical high | ~20% in early 1980s |
| Recent market reaction | Treasury yields rose ~5 bps; S&P 500 edged up 0.4% |
The federal funds rate is the overnight interest rate that banks charge each other for borrowing excess reserves held at the Federal Reserve. It is set by the FOMC eight times a year and serves as a benchmark for short‑term credit costs, influencing everything from mortgage rates to corporate borrowing【1】. By law, banks must keep a reserve equal to a statutory percentage of deposits; any surplus can be lent to other banks, with the interest charged constituting the fed funds rate【1】.
The Dec 18 2024 decision cut the target range by 25 basis points to 4.25%‑4.50%, the first reduction since the pandemic‑era floor of 0%‑0.25% that was in place from March 2020 through much of 2022【1】. The move follows a period of aggressive tightening that began in 2022 as the Fed sought to curb inflation running above its 2% goal. Earlier in the 2000s the rate was near zero after the 2008 crisis, while the early 1980s saw a peak of about 20% to fight double‑digit inflation【1】. The latest cut aims to lower borrowing costs for households and businesses without reigniting price pressures, a balance the Fed monitors through core inflation and labor market data【1】.
Although the Fed’s statement did not guarantee further cuts, markets priced in a modest easing. Treasury yields slipped a few basis points, and equity indices rose modestly as lower financing costs boosted profit expectations for rate‑sensitive sectors such as housing and autos【1】. The dollar weakened slightly against a basket of major currencies, reflecting reduced demand for higher‑yielding U.S. assets【1】.
The Fed’s modest rate cut underscores its dual mandate: supporting economic growth while keeping inflation anchored near 2%. How long the easing will continue, and whether it will be enough to offset lingering price pressures, remains the key question for markets.
Coverage is mostly measured — 35 of 38 reports stay neutral.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 2 outlets · Jun 25, 2026 · How we report
The target range is 3.50%‑3.75%, unchanged for four consecutive meetings.
The effective rate was 3.63%, which lies within the 3.50%‑3.75% target range.
The previous half‑point cut occurred in 2008 during the global financial crisis.
Inflation (PCE) was revised to 3.6% and GDP growth to 2.2% for 2026.
Nine officials anticipate at least one hike, six expect at least two hikes, and another nine foresee no move or a cut.